People with type 1 and type 2 diabetes who used the new OneTouch Via&trade mealtime reported they missed fewer doses and felt less stress about dosing.

TOP INSIGHT
People with type 1 and type 2 diabetes who used the new OneTouch on-demand insulin delivery system reported they missed fewer doses and felt less stress about dosing compared to multiple daily injections.
The MAE study followed 44 patients with a median age of 57 years, who used the OneTouch Via&trade patch for 60 days, instead of their bolus injection device (75% pen users and 25% syringe and vial users). Patients responded to insulin usage questionnaires at baseline, then after one, four and eight weeks. By weeks four to eight, more than half (58% and 52%, respectively) of study participants acknowledged dosing more often than they would with a pen or syringe - with satisfaction rates increasing the longer they used OneTouch Via&trade. Furthermore, 98% of patients said the patch let them dose discreetly in public, with 88% noting they worried less about forgetting insulin - creating a less stressful disease management experience.
The healthcare professionals who assisted with the study noted that they preferred the OneTouch Via&trade over both insulin pens and syringes (75% and 100%, respectively) and would be likely to recommend it to their patients. The doctors also reported that they would start patients on mealtime insulin earlier because of the ease of use of the OneTouch Via&trade patch.
"We understand the physical and emotional challenges people with diabetes face every day, and are constantly driving to create innovative solutions that help people with diabetes manage their condition and live the life they want," said John Wilson, Worldwide Vice President of Insulin Delivery, Animas Corporation. "As an injection-free insulin delivery patch, OneTouch Via&trade will help people stay on top of their treatment and also allow them to stay in those vital moments in life - a dinner party, a grandchild's birthday, a work event. It is our hope that once commercially available, it will eliminate the barriers many people living with diabetes face surrounding mealtime insulin and ultimately improve health outcomes."
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the insulin delivery patch on April 10, 2012, for use by adults over 21 years of age with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. An additional Clinical Outcomes Study, being conducted across 60 trial sites in the U.S. and Europe, will measure the change in A1C levels, glycemic variability and patient reported quality of life seen in patients using OneTouch Via&trade compared to insulin pens over the course of 24 and 44 weeks.
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